Programming requires such intense focus and dedication. As things progress one man cannot learn every language every paradigm, we must find a way to work together.
Those of us who do it well are gods,
There is one dire and direct consequence,
Forums, IRC, TextBoards, etc..
They are all a complete scum-heap or vermin ridden crap
So how shall we /prog/, take over the next millennia?
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-13 2:00
>>1
>As things progress one man cannot learn every language every paradigm, we must find a way to work together.
YOU JUST WATCH ME.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-13 4:06
>>1
I don't understand your message. Are you advocating for programming communities or against them?
>>2
Everybody step back, we have an EXPERT PROGRAMMER in the board.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-13 4:52
/prog/ is the only programming community I am a member of. I like it when I can call someone who is a goddamn cretin a ``goddamn cretin''.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-13 5:39
/prog/ is useless for actually getting any kind of useful work done. The one thing that was made in here (anonchat) was a total and utter failure (telnet? wtf?). Lets just stick to endlessly repeating our retarded memes and replying to every thread. NO EXCEPTIONS
>>5
Nothing wrong with telnet, it's just that the implementation was retarded. And the concept was retarded.
I'd love to get involved in some /prog/ects, but like every other community, we're short on ideas. Make a thread if you have one.
Then everyone can post a line of code until it's done. WITHOUT EXCEPTION.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-14 7:38
Quality control and forced (if only by convention) anon don't really go well together.
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-14 7:39
I LIKE BIG BLACK DICK
Name:
Anonymous2008-01-14 8:30
>>5 /prog/ is useless for actually getting any kind of useful work done.
Blatand lies, you just have to make the start.
/prog/ is full of experienced people with free time in their hands.
>>5 The one thing that was made in here (anonchat) was a total and utter failure (telnet? wtf?).
"Telnet" is the only thing that can be implemented with a toy language, I'm afraid.